Does this station wagon still exist?
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Home away from home
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blog.modernmechanix.com/21-foot-12-passe ... tm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ModernMechanix+%28Modern+Mechanix%29&utm_content=Google+Reader
I found this link on today's Hemmings blog.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 9:33
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Forum Ambassador
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Wasn't there a mention or a comparison in either the Kimes edited book or maybe a PAC published article. Believe there were some interior photos showing a fairly plush back portion. Not sure what they were comparing to but IIRC the sheer size was found to be a huge deterrent. Believe one of the articles or writers of the time said it felt like driving a bus.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 11:52
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Howard
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Home away from home
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I vaguely remember something from the past about a Packard "El Paso" station wagon. Can't place it right now.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 12:03
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Home away from home
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I found this post in a thread on the Professional Car Society Web site:
"Keith Snyder 08-20-2010, 09:51 AM The story of the Henney Super Station Wagon is related in detail in McPherson's recent Henney book. You're right, there was only one and that was destroyed in a fire."
Posted on: 2013/2/25 12:07
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Home away from home
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Here is a link to the Packard "El Paso" station wagon. Don't know if this was ever built for the public.
ebay.com/itm/Vintage-1953-Packard-El-Pas ... DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20cf964222
Posted on: 2013/2/25 17:55
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Forum Ambassador
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I don't recall any mention of the Henney Super Station Wagon in the "Kimes book". (The change in the Bookshelf entries to indicate "Author" as "Martin, Bradley, et al" was unnecessary, and I completely disagree with that action.)
I vaguely remember an article showing pix of a car like that, but abandoned and vandalized, with windows smashed out. It may have been The Packard Cormorant, but I've no way to check as I have since disposed of my collection of that publication. IIRC, the one-off car was ultimately scrapped. While I don't think there was much market for a wagon with a "wet bar", it's a shame that Packard didn't pick up on the idea, which seems ahead of its time. For example, I don't recall third-row, rear-facing seats prior to the 1960s. With a little tweaking, and a Jr. model, as well, wagon models might have been just what Packard needed for some additional sales in those years. Meanwhile, the "El Paso" station wagon is something completely different and never rolled off the factory assembly line. Rather it is one three "Ghost Packards" commissioned by Carl Schneider and featured in the April 2002 issue of Collectible Automobile. One of the cars was based on actual factory drawings that were discivered abroad, and another was based on design described by Macauley in a Saga magazine article. However, I'm not sure of inspriration for the wagon. IIRC, it has since undergone some revision WRT interior and "endgate". Not long after those cars appeared in CA, Schneider was a featured guest at the annual Perrysburg, OH meet. He had faux brochures made, in the style of factory-published material of the period, and while stock of those brochures were available for sale at that meet, the price was too rich for my pocketbook. I suspect the eBay offering (#140921684514) is NOT a vintage ad, but was similarly made, as set dressing. Caveat emptor.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 19:34
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Forum Ambassador
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Just for interests sake, in America's Packard Museum, Dayton Ohio, there is a '50's Station Wagon.
More pic's in this album, starting from Pic #160.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 22:00
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Mal
/o[]o\ ==== Bowral, Southern Highlands of NSW, Australia "Out of chaos comes order" - Nietzsche. 1938 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD 1941 One-Twenty Club Coupe - SOLD 1948 Super Eight Limo, chassis RHD - SOLD 1950 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD What's this? Put your Packard in the Packard Vehicle Registry! Here's how! Any questions - PM or email me at ozstatman@gmail.com |
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Home away from home
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I believe Packard did good business on their 1949 and 1950 station wagons. Very cleverly, they based them on their sedans and used as many sedan parts as possible. Most of the new parts were made of wood which is cheaper to tool up than steel.
So yes, there was a lot of hand work but the cost of adding a station wagon to the line was minimal. They sold for a premium price, station wagons were the most expensive body style in any car maker's line. So I believe they made a profit. And the station wagon was a great prestige car. In those days they were associated with the country club set, the yachting set, and the upper crust generally. Why didn't Packard make a similar wagon based on the 51 and up junior line? The fifties were the great boom years for the station wagon and it puzzles me that Packard dropped them just when they were becoming popular.
Posted on: 2013/2/25 23:02
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Re: Does this station wagon still exist?
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Just can't stay away
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Quite a beautiful station wagon.
Posted on: 2013/2/26 20:55
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Andrew Armitage
Plainfield, IL '47 Packard Custom Super Clipper Eight Limousine '41 Cadillac Sixty-Seven Series '40 Buick Limited |
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